I have no sufficient knowledge about fusion hence no opinion about their chances to produce a net energy.
But I do have experience about shocks, mechanical engineering with big forces over short times, and precise control, as I developed hardware for crash-test, which includes reproducing precisely with big actuators the movements of an accident (fun, yes).
So my impression for this part of their project, that is the ~220 hammers:
They want
100m/s and this produces a shock wave at about the absolute maximum yield strength of the very best non-brittle alloys. Here I doubt because of stress concentration. But at 30m/s my parts didn't wear out, and 50m/s must be possible, so if 100m/s fail, a bigger sphere may compensate the slower hammers.
They need around
1µs precision on the shock datum over all hammers. Using the fastest hydraulic servo-valves (do they have valves?) with 10-20ms reaction time, we achieved 100µs precision more or less, after painstaking optimization.
But here are
my two cents worth of enabling technology:
http://saposjoint.net/Forum/viewtopic.php?f=49&t=2774 (visitors can't watch the drawings at Sapo's website, pity)
http://www.scienceforums.net/topic/58924-magnetized-target-fusion/ (there visitors can, and my text is more concise)
- An
eddy current brake, fast and finely adjustable, to control the movement of the hammers pushed by full force
- A
fast unlocker to release the hammers within 1ms, easing subsequent control
-
Maybe a
displacement sensor for the hammers. At least speed and resolution look feasible, but intuition would shout to keep shocks and optics apart.
Marc Schaefer, aka Enthalpy